Pardners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about Pardners.

Pardners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 169 pages of information about Pardners.

“Can’t tell.  This bunch would bust anybody’s mental tugs, an’ they make a mistake drivin’ him so.  Say!  How’s my gums look tonight?” George stretched his lips back, showing his teeth, while Captain made careful examination.

“All right.  How are mine?”

“Red as a berry.”

Every day they searched thus for the symptoms, looking for discolouration, and anxiously watching bruises on limb or body.  Men live in fear when their comrades vanish silently from their midst.  Each night upon retiring they felt legs nervously, punching here and there to see that the flesh retained its resiliency.

So insidious is the malady’s approach that it may be detected only thus.  A lassitude perhaps, a rheumatic laziness, or pains and swelling at the joints.  Mayhap one notes a putty-like softness of the lower limbs.  Where he presses, the finger mark remains, filling up sluggishly.  No mental depression at first, nor fever, only a drooping ambition, fatigue, enlarging parts, now gradual, now sudden.

The grim humour of seeing grown men gravely poking their legs with rigid digits, or grinning anxiously into hand-mirrors had struck some of the tenderfeet at first, but the implacable progress of the disease; its black, merciless presence, pausing destructively here and there, had terrorized them into a hopeless fatalism till they cowered helplessly, awaiting its touch.

One night Captain announced to his partner.  “I’m going over to the Frenchmen’s, I hear Menard is down.”

“What’s the use of buttin’ in where ye ain’t wanted?  As fer me, them frogeaters can all die like salmon; I won’t go nigh ’em an’ I’ve told ’em so.  I give ’em good advice, an’ what’d I get?  What’d that daffy doctor do?  Pooh-poohed at me an’ physiced them.  Lord!  Physic a man with scurvy—­might as well bleed a patient fer amputation.”  George spoke with considerable heat.

Captain pulled his parka hood well down so that the fox-tails around the edge protected his features, and stepped out into the evening.  He had made several such trips in the past few months to call on men smitten with the sickness, but all to no effect.  Being “chechakos” they were supreme in their conceit, and refused to heed his advice.

Returning at bed time he found his partner webbing a pair of snow-shoes by the light of a stinking “go-devil,” consisting of a string suspended in a can of molten grease.  The camp had sold them grub, but refused the luxury of candles.  Noting his gravity, George questioned: 

“Well, how’s Menard?”

“Dead!” Captain shook himself as though at the memory.  “It was awful.  He died while I was talking to him.”

“Don’t say!  How’s that?”

“I found him propped up in a chair.  He looked bad, but said he was feeling fine—­”

“That’s the way they go.  I’ve seen it many a time—­feelin’ fine plumb to the last.”

“He’d been telling me about a bet he had with Promont.  Promont was taken last week, too, you know, same time.  Menard bet him twenty dollars that he’d outlast him.”

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Pardners from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.